New England Patriots extend TE Aaron Hernandez

I liked the Patriots’ extension of Rob Gronkowski because I feel the value of the tight end position is going to go up in the next 2 years, between now and when Gronkowski would have been a free agent in 2014. I’m not so sure about this deal. Gronkowski’s was 6 years, 54 million. Hernandez’s is 5 years, 40 million. The Patriots are taking an awfully big risk that the tight end position with continue to be a part big of a league and not just a fad because these two deals were the highest per year extensions given to a tight end ever.

If the tight end revolution doesn’t continue, they’ll be stuck paying guys big money at a position that just doesn’t command it. It was fine to take that risk with Gronkowski, because that’s one player and because he’s so good at everything. Including playoffs, the Patriots ran 1362 offensive plays last year. Gronkowski was on the field for 1290 of them. No other tight end does that. Very few players at any position do that. That’s more than any wide receiver on the Patriots, including Wes Welker.

Aaron Hernandez was on the field for 1051 of them. If we look at the regular season, just so we have something to compare him with accurately, Hernandez played 864 offensive snaps, 16th in the league at his position, a number slightly skewed because the Patriots run more plays in general than most teams. Either way, we’re looking at a guy with a usage rate in the high 70% range, which, at his position, is pretty average.

I think they’re taking a big risk committing this kind of money to him, especially with 2 years left on his rookie deal. And the reward I don’t think is as great as with Gronkowski if the tight end revolution continues because Hernandez is not nearly worth what Gronkowski’s worth. He’s essentially just a big wide receiver. Gronkowski is also a big receiver, but he’s also an incredible blocker and as a receiver. He was better than even Hernandez last year as a receiver, in terms of total yards and yards per route run.

Grade: C

If you’re interested in doing a fantasy football league with me, here’s the link (no draft date set yet, currently standard, with the option to become PPR with group vote). http://msn.foxsports.com/fantasy/football/commissioner/Registration/Private.aspx?league=55086&password=FanSpot2

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The curious case of the Tennessee Titans’ offense

The Tennessee Titans have had a very middle of the pack offense in each of the last 2 seasons, ranking 17th by scoring 22.3 points per game in 2010, and 21th by scoring 20.3 points per game in 2011. However, they have the potential to be a top-10 offense in 2012. The reason for this is their playmakers. Once known as a conservative team that didn’t use high picks on offensive playmakers, they’ve used a 1st round pick on an offensive playmaker in 4 of the last 5 seasons, taking running back Chris Johnson in 2008, wide receiver Kenny Britt in 2009, quarterback Jake Locker in 2011, and wide receiver Kendall Wright in 2012.

That group doesn’t even include their two leading returning receivers, tight Jared Cook, a 2009 2nd round pick who caught 49 passes for 759 yards and 3 touchdowns last year, and Nate Washington, a free agent acquisition who broke out with 74 catches for 1023 yards and 7 touchdowns last year. Heading into only his age 29 season, Washington is still in the prime of his career.

Last year, they didn’t really have all these playmakers. Kendall Wright was not there. Chris Johnson spent half the year trying to shake off an offseason holdout. Kenny Britt missed 13 games and most of a 14th with injury. Jared Cook was only average until his final 3 games, when a light seemed to click. Jake Locker, meanwhile, only played sparingly as a rookie, attempting just 66 passes.

The veteran Matt Hasselbeck started all 16 games. Hasselbeck did an admirable job considering the lack of talent around him. He completed 61.6% of his passes for an average of 6.9 YPA and 18 touchdowns to 15 interceptions. However, he led an inferior offense even as compared to 2010’s which was quarterbacked by a mix of Kerry Collins, Vince Young, and Rusty Smith.

The differences between 2010’s offense and 2011’s offense, other than the quarterback, were with Chris Johnson and Kenny Britt. And the difference at quarterback was, at the very least, not a downgrade and I think most would agree that Hasselbeck is a better quarterback than the trio they ran out in 2010. Kenny Britt missed 4 games in 2010 with injury and most of a 5th, much better than the 13 he missed in 2011, as well as part as a 14th. Chris Johnson, meanwhile, went from rushing for 1364 yards and 11 touchdowns on 316 carries to 1047 yards and 4 touchdowns on 262 carries. So how did this affect their offense?

In the 11 games Kenny Britt played entirely in 2010, along with the 2010 version of Chris Johnson, the Titans scored roughly 27.1 points per game, which would have ranked 5th in the league in 2010 and 2011. And that was with a mediocre bunch at quarterback, guys who were all backups somewhere by the end of the 2011 season. They threw for 2320 yards, 21 touchdowns, and 8 interceptions in those 11 games, as opposed to 958 yards, 3 touchdowns, and 7 interceptions in their other 5 games (all losses by the way, as they scored just 12.8 points per game).

One thing that stands out from those numbers is actually how few yards they threw for as opposed to how many points per game they scored. In fact, in the 11 games they scored 27.1 points per game in, they only passed the ball a combined 312 times, just 28.4 times per game. That’s a solid 7.4 YPA, as opposed to 5.9 YPA in the 5 other games without Britt for the full game.

And it wasn’t just that the Titans ran a lot. The Titans ranked 30th in the league overall, passing 474 times and just 23rd in the league, running 406 times. That’s not a lot of plays. In fact, the Titans ranked dead last by running just 56.7 plays per game in 2010. That might sound like the mark of a bad offense, but it’s not necessarily as they ranked 7th in the league in points per play. If anything, that makes their offense seem more impressive because that’s incredibly efficient.

Team Plays per game rank Points per game rank
Minnesota 23 29
Seattle 24 23
Carolina 25 32
Chicago 26 21
Tampa Bay 27 20
Buffalo 28 28
San Francisco 29 24
Arizona 30 T-26
Cleveland 31 31
Tennessee 32 17

See an outlier? Tennessee had a 15 spot difference in plays per game as opposed to points per game. No one else had a difference of more than 7. There is clearly a correlation between points per game and plays per game and simple logic would tell you that makes sense. The more plays your team is on the field, the more opportunities you have to score. Plus, staying on the field is also a sign of a healthy offense. Tennessee clearly defied this logic in 2010 and it’s evident in the chart found below.

Team Points per play rank Points per game rank
New England 1 1
San Diego 2 2
Philadelphia 3 3
Green Bay 4 10
Indianapolis 5 4
Oakland 6 6
Tennessee 7 17
Pittsburgh 8 12
NY Giants 9 T-7
Dallas 10 T-7

See an outlier? Of the teams ranked in the top-10 in points per play, only Tennessee didn’t rank in the top-12 in points per game and they had a 10 spot difference between points per play and points per game rank. It’s clear that their points per play rank was not an accurate measure of their offense. They didn’t have the 7th best offense in the league. And it’s also clear their points per game rank was not an accurate measure of their offense. They didn’t have the 17th best offense in the league either. If anything, it would have probably been most accurate to say they had the 12th best offense in the league. With a presumed upgrade at quarterback with Matt Hasselbeck coming in, as well as the prospect of a full 16 game season from Kenny Britt (with whom they scored 27.1 points per game, 5th most in the league), there was reason to be optimistic for the Titans’ offense in 2011.

However, they ranked 21st. So what happened? Well, Britt tore his ACL during the middle of week 3 and Chris Johnson struggled. Any upgrade at quarterback with Hasselbeck coming in went unnoticed as he didn’t have the same supporting cast that the 2010 trio had. If Chris Johnson can bounce back and Kenny Britt can stay healthy in 2012, their offensive potential should be looking as least as bright as it was last season. They haven’t suffered any major losses offensively from 2010 to 2012. The question is, will that happen?

First let’s start with Chris Johnson. Johnson rushed for just 1047 yards and 4 touchdowns on 262 carries in 2011, after rushing for 1364 yards and 11 touchdowns on 316 carries in 2010. He was particularly bad in the 1st half as the season, rushing for just 366 yards and a score on 121 carries, as opposed to 681 yards and 3 touchdowns on 141 carries in the 2nd half. Not so coincidentally, the Titans averaged just 19.5 points per game in the 1st half of the season, going 4-4, as opposed to 21.1 points per game in the 2nd half of the season, going 5-3.

Johnson’s 2nd half improvement is promising and makes sense. Johnson struggled in the 1st half because of a contract related holdout that lasted until right before the start of the season. As a result, he got out of shape and missed an entire offseason of a new playbook implementation with a new coaching staff (for those people who like to think that history repeats itself, Maurice Jones-Drew is doing the same exact thing right now…just saying). By the 2nd half of the season, he had worked himself back into shape and had gotten the offense and blocking scheme mastered.

Now a full season removed from that holdout, he should be even better. He obviously knows the playbook by now and I doubt he’s out of shape after all the work he put in this offseason. Rather than focusing on getting paid this offseason, Johnson’s time was spent attending every single one of the Titans’ team activities and practices, including the ones that weren’t mandatory. He used to skip the ones that were not mandatory and work out on his own at home in Orlando, but this offseason he was there, putting in all the work with his teammates and he was reportedly very impressive. He should be back to his old self.

Now let’s go onto Kenny Britt, he’s not such a safe bet. He’s obviously very talented, as evidenced by the 27.1 points per game they scored in the 11 games he played in 2010. That obviously wasn’t all him, but in those 11 games, Britt caught 42 passes for 775 yards and 9 touchdowns, good for 61 catches for 1127 yards and 13 touchdowns over 16 games. He looked to be on pace for that kind of season in 2011 before getting hurt, catching 14 passes for 271 yards and 3 touchdowns through 2 games.

However, now he is coming off a torn ACL and had minor knee surgery on each one of his knees this offseason. He’s expected to be activated next week and should be ready for week 1, but he’s obviously an injury risk. In 2010, even before his major injury, he missed 4 games and most of a 5th. The good news is he’s only heading into his age 24 season so he should be able to heal faster than someone 5 or 10 years older.

The other concern for him is discipline. Even if he were ready to go week 1, the commissioner probably wouldn’t let him. He had to pay Roger Goodell a visit this offseason for the 2nd time in as many offseasons, which is never a good sign. Britt was arrested for DUI, his 8th arrest since being drafted in 2009. Last offseason, he paid Goodell a visit after getting arrested 3 times during the offseason, but escaped punishment because the league decided not to punish players for things that happened during the lockout. This year, he won’t be as lucky. Everyone knows a suspension is coming. He even admits it. It’s expected to be the 1-3 game variety if ESPN’s Adam Schefter is to be believed (and as a general rule of them, I always believe everything he says), so it won’t be a major issue.

The 1-3 game suspension will also give Britt time to rest his knees and he should be able to go once he returns from suspension. He won’t play all 16 games and the threat of further injury and/or sapped explosiveness is obviously there, but he should be their leading receiver this season and other offensive upgrades should be able to offset Britt not being able to have the ideal season.

One offensive upgrade is the addition of Kendall Wright, a 1st round pick receiver out of Baylor. The other two are simply an improved Nate Washington and Jared Cook, as compared to 2010. This offense is not as dependant on Britt and Johnson as it was in 2010. Cook, a 2009 2nd round pick, saw the light flick on last season, catching 49 passes for 759 yards and 3 touchdowns. He was even better in his final 3 games, when he caught 21 passes for 335 yards and a touchdown, so maybe he’ll play even better in his 4th season in the league in 2012.

Nate Washington, meanwhile, caught 74 passes for 1023 yards and 7 touchdowns in 2011, after catching 42 passes for 687 yards and 6 touchdowns in 2010. It’s easy to say his improvement was only because of the absence of Kenny Britt, but Washington only actually saw 30 more targets from 2010 to 2011, which is 2 fewer than the increase in catches he had. Washington only caught 47.7% of his targets in 2010, but caught 62.7% of them in 2011.

If he sees the 88 targets he had in 2010 again in 2012, but maintains his 2011 rates, he would have 55 catches for 761 yards and 5 touchdowns. Those are reasonable projected numbers for him, even with Kendall Wright coming in, because Britt won’t play all 16 games and might not be 100% and because the Titans will pass more often and probably more effectively. He’s a solid #2 receiver opposite Britt.

Speaking of passing more effectively, the reason for that is another upgrade at quarterback, as Jake Locker will be taking over the starting quarterback job. Locker has accuracy issues dating back to his days at has his days at the University of Washington, where he completed just 53.9% of his passes and maxed out at 58.2% in 2009. Locker has done nothing to ease those concerns by completing just 11 of 24 (45.8%) this Preseason and just 51.5% of his passes last season, in limited action.

However, he’s got all the physical tools and showed them last season, showing off his arm by averaging 8.2 YPA and throwing 4 touchdowns to no interceptions and showing off his wheels by rushing for 56 yards and another score on 8 carries. Titans were better offensively with Locker on the field than Hasselbeck last season. Hasselbeck led the Titans to 264 points (not counting XPs or 2 PT conversions) on 162 drives (not counting end of half kneel downs/run out the clocks), good for 1.63 points per drive, while Locker led them to 33 points on 18 drives, 1.83 points per drive.

With a year under his belt and a better supporting cast, he has the potential to have a very strong 2nd season. After all, an inferior trio in 2011 combined to throw for 7.4 YPA and 21 touchdowns to 8 interceptions in 11 games with Kenny Britt and that was before breakout seasons to Cook and Washington and without the addition of Wright. Assuming Johnson is back or mostly back and Britt plays in most of the team’s games, he could have very strong numbers.

The Titans ran 636 passing plays last season, 584 passes, 28 quarterback runs, and 24 sacks. They are expected to increase that total this season. Let’s say they increase it to 650 passing plays, which is conservative. That sack total could go up because Jake Locker took a sack of 25.0% of pressured snaps last season, as opposed to 16.1% for Hasselbeck. However, the Titans return 3 of 5 starters from an offensive line that ranked 2nd in the league in pass blocking efficiency last year and the two that didn’t were arguably the two worst, Jake Scott and Eugene Amano. Scott was replaced by the superior Steve Hutchinson, while Amano sucked anyway. I can’t see them giving up more than 30 sacks.

So that’s 620 non-sack passing plays. Locker took off and ran once every 8.5 non-sack drop backs last season (in college, that number was once every 3.5 non-sack drop backs, but he played behind a much poorer offensive line, which required him to run for his life more, and on top of that, quarterbacks typically run less in the NFL than in college). If he continues to run once every 8.5 non-sack drop backs, he’ll have 73 runs, meaning 547 pass attempts.

If he averages the 7.4 YPA that Titans quarterbacks averaged in 11 games with Britt healthy in 2010, that’s 4048 passing yards. If he maintains the TD and INT rates that Titan quarterbacks had in 11 games with Britt healthy in 2011, that’s 37 touchdowns and 12 touchdowns. That’s obviously unlikely (remember their points per yard rate and how ridiculous it was as opposed to their points per game rate), but is something like 27 touchdowns and 14 interceptions unlikely, after everything you’ve read? And is a top-10 offense for the Titans unlikely? Unless Locker proves to be a bust, I don’t think so.

The one thing that has remained consistent for the Titans has been their defense. Unlike their offense it’s consistent and much easier to predict. In 2010, they ranked 15th, allowing 21.2 points per game and in 2010, they ranked 8th allowing 19.8 points per game. They should be closer to 8th again in 2011, which would probably give them a top-10 defense to go with a top-10 offense. This was a very young defense last year with 6 of 11 starters drafted since 2009 (including a whopping 4 rookies). The continued maturity of those players along with strong depth and the addition of Kamerion Wimbley to bolster their pass rush (31st in the league last year), will make up for the loss of Cortland Finnegan. Unless Locker implodes, the Titans might just be one of the most balanced teams in the NFL.

If you’re interested in doing a fantasy football league with me, here’s the link (no draft date set yet, currently standard, with the option to become PPR with group vote). http://msn.foxsports.com/fantasy/football/commissioner/Registration/Private.aspx?league=55086&password=FanSpot2

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Jets yet to score a touchdown in preseason

It’s the preseason. It’s important not to get too excited or too worried about anything that happens in the preseason. Starters rarely play into the 2nd half and game plans are as vanilla as they come on both sides of the ball. Countless players don’t play for precautionary reasons with injuries they would play through during the regular season. Aaron Rodgers is 20 of 41 (48.8%), while Curtis Painter has a higher quarterback rating than both Peyton Manning and Andrew Luck.

However, one thing to be concerned about is the Jets right now. The Jets have played 35 preseason possessions and have yet to score a touchdown, unless you count the pick six that Mark Sanchez threw to the Giants’ defenders in their 2nd preseason game. They’ve scored 21 total points in 3 games, all on field goals. Mark Sanchez is 24 of 35 (68.6%), but only for 203 yards (5.8 YPA), 0 touchdowns, and 2 interceptions.

Tim Tebow has been worse as a passer, completing 13 of 36 (36.1%) for 151 yards (4.2 YPA), 0 touchdowns, and 2 interceptions, but he’s made up the difference with 84 yards on 11 carries, while Sanchez has rushed 4 times for 17 yards. In Tebow’s 15 possessions, the Jets have scored 9 points. The same goes for Sanchez’s 14 possessions (3 points if you subtract the pick six). Tebow’s rushing abilities have also allowed him to pick up 10 1st downs to Sanchez’ 6.

Tebow might look worse as a passer now, but when the games have counted, their numbers are similar as passers. Tebow’s career quarterback rating is 75.1, while Sanchez’s is 73.2. Sanchez has completed a higher percentage of his passes (55.3% to 47.3%), while Tebow averages more per attempt (6.8 to 6.5) and has a better touchdown to interception rate (17/9 to 55/51).

A look at more advanced statistics from last season shows a similar story. Tebow’s adjusted QB rating (doesn’t count drops, throw aways, hit as throwns, spikes, batted passes, or yards after catch) was 79.41, while Sanchez’ was 76.18. Meanwhile, Sanchez was one of just 3 quarterbacks who graded out worse than Tebow as a passer on ProFootballFocus (Sanchez, Gabbert, Skelton). Obviously, Sanchez has the experience edge, but Tebow won the head-to-head battle last year in Denver, with an inferior supporting cast.

However, as a runner and as a leader, Tebow has the edge. There are obviously no stats for leadership, but Tebow commanded the respect of the Broncos’ locker room last year in a way that Sanchez never has with the Jets and the same goes dating back to their days at Florida and USC respectively. As a runner, Sanchez has 314 yards and 12 touchdowns on 103 rushing attempts in his NFL career, while Tebow has 887 yards and 12 touchdowns on 167 rushing attempts. Tebow also ranked 2nd among quarterbacks running the football on ProFootballFocus last year (behind Cam Newton).

Neither of these quarterbacks are good passers, especially behind this offensive line, throwing to this group of receivers, so why not go with the better runner and leader? The Jets made the playoffs in 2009 with a strong defense (1st with 14.8 points per game allowed) and an ultra conservative offense (607 rushing attempts to 393 passing attempts). That’s their best chance at making the playoffs this season, following that model.

They have the defense (their 20th ranked scoring defense last year was misleading as they ranked 2nd in defensive DVOA), but they don’t have the running back talent and depth to carry the ball that many times. They need a quarterback who can carry the ball effectively, open things up on the ground for the other backs, and minimize turnovers as a passer.

Who does that sound like? The quarterback with a career 3.0 YPC and 3.6% career interception rate or the with a career 5.3 YPC and 2.5% career interception rate who has commanded the locker room and won at every level and who essentially made the playoffs running the same style offense last year? In 11 starts last year, Tebow’s Broncos ran 428 times to 264 passes, which extrapolated 623 runs to 384 passes over 16 games. Do those numbers look vaguely familiar?

If you’re interested in doing a fantasy football league with me, here’s the link (no draft date set yet, currently standard, with the option to become PPR with group vote). http://msn.foxsports.com/fantasy/football/commissioner/Registration/Private.aspx?league=55086&password=FanSpot2

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Seattle Seahawks trade QB Tarvaris Jackson to Buffalo Bills

Trade for Seattle: There was just no room in Seattle for Jackson. Russell Wilson had an impressive offseason to win the starting quarterback job as a 3rd round pick rookie, while Matt Flynn basically won the backup quarterback job by virtue of his fully guaranteed 8 million dollar salary in 2012, 6 million of which had already been paid to him in the form of a signing bonus. Jackson was owed 4 million this season and even if he had agreed to a pay cut with the Seahawks, which he did with the Bills as part of this trade, it wouldn’t have made any sense to keep him. Credit them for getting something for him.

Grade: A

Trade for Buffalo: Ryan Fitzpatrick has definitely flashed at times in his career as a starter, but he’s certainly not a proven franchise quarterback yet and he is pretty injury prone. For that reason, it’s a necessity for the Bills to protect themselves with a solid veteran quarterback. However, Vince Young, who was signed this offseason to a 1 year deal to do that, has been awful this preseason, completing just 25 of 52 (48.1%) for 276 yards (5.3 YPA), 0 touchdowns, and 2 interceptions. His competition for the job, Tyler Thigpen, was even worse completing 11 of 23 (47.8%) for 94 yards (4.1 YPA), 0 touchdowns, and 2 interceptions. Both of them will likely be cut as part of final cuts now, or even sooner, as Jackson will be Fitzpatrick’s primary backup. For a late round pick and a reasonable salary after pay cut, this move makes a lot of sense.

Grade: A

If you’re interested in doing a fantasy football league with me, here’s the link (no draft date set yet, currently standard, with the option to become PPR with group vote). http://msn.foxsports.com/fantasy/football/commissioner/Registration/Private.aspx?league=55086&password=FanSpot2

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Cowboys put Dez Bryant on strict “secret” probation

The Dallas Cowboys took a chance on Dez Bryant in the 1st round, 24th overall, in 2010. Bryant was a top-10 talent who fell for character reasons and the results have been mixed. Bryant has had several off the field controversies, including one arrest for domestic abuse of his mother (that was eventually dropped), and on the field, he hasn’t always lived up to his physical gifts as he’s struggled to learn the playbook, run routes, and stay in shape. In spite of all that, Bryant caught 63 passes for 928 yards and 9 touchdowns last year, mostly on his athletic gifts. Heading into his 3rd season in the league, Bryant has had a good offseason on the field and looks poised for a breakout year. A receiver’s 3rd year in the league is often a breakout year.

The Cowboys are being extra cautious with Bryant after his arrest though and, according to ESPN Dallas, they have put him on a strict “secret” probation, though I guess it’s not really a secret anymore. Under the terms of this probation, Bryant has a midnight curfew which he needs team official approval to break, he cannot drink alcohol or attend strip clubs, he can only attend nightclubs if they are team approved and he has his security team with him, his rotating 3 man security team will go with him everywhere he goes in public (at least one at all times) and drive him to practice, games, and team functions, and he must attend twice weekly counseling sessions (and you thought your workplace rules were rough).

As rough as all that is, I applaud the Cowboys for being strict and disciplined with him. It’s a privilege, not a right, to play in the National Football League and a very high, prestigious, and much sought after privilege. If he doesn’t want to play in the NFL, he doesn’t have to, but from what it sounds like, playing in the NFL is worth all this trouble to him. They may be treating him like a child, but some of the things he’s done over the past few years (from stupid, to lazy, to illegal) have been childish. The Cowboys made a big investment in him and want to make sure it pays off. If the discipline works, Bryant could easily become a top-5 receiver in the NFL.

If you’re interested in doing a fantasy football league with me, here’s the link (no draft date set yet, currently standard, with the option to become PPR with group vote). http://msn.foxsports.com/fantasy/football/commissioner/Registration/Private.aspx?league=55086&password=FanSpot2

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Seattle Seahawks cut Terrell Owens

The Seahawks cut TO today in one of the least surprising moves of the offseason. When they signed TO earlier this month, I said he would either struggle this season or get cut and added that the best way this could end for the Seahawks would be if TO got cut before the season. Earlier this week, I wrote that the end was near for TO and now the end is here after another poor preseason performance. All in all, he was targeted 9 times in 2 preseason games, making 2 catches and dropping 3. From what I’ve heard, his practices weren’t much better.

Terrell Owens is one of the greatest receivers of all time, but father time is undefeated. The list of receivers to play in their age 39 season or later and have success starts and ends with Jerry Rice. Only 3 of the top-30 receivers all time played at this age or later and only Rice had any success (Charlie Joiner caught 34 passes for 440 yards and 2 touchdowns, while Joey Galloway caught 12 passes for 173 yards and didn’t score).

He was pretty much done in 2010 and wasn’t going to be any better 2 years and a torn ACL later, after a year out of football. In 2010, he did catch 72 passes for 983 yards and 9 touchdowns, but he did that on 132 targets (54.5%) and 10 balls targeted for him ended up getting intercepted. Carson Palmer was just forcing him the football, which is why he led the league in interceptions that year and the Bengals went 4-12. He also dropped 8 passes.

All the TO signing did was generate some media attention and take practice reps away from young receivers like Golden Tate, Kris Durham, Deon Butler, and Ricardo Lockette, so, even though they didn’t have to pay him anything, the signing was a failure. With about a week left before final cuts, don’t expect anyone to take a chance on him. Owens will eventually give up and officially retire and wait for the Hall of Fame to call, which it should.

If you’re interested in doing a fantasy football league with me, here’s the link (no draft date set yet, currently standard, with the option to become PPR with group vote). http://msn.foxsports.com/fantasy/football/commissioner/Registration/Private.aspx?league=55086&password=FanSpot2

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Miami Dolphins trade CB Vontae Davis to the Indianapolis Colts

Trade for Colts: Ah, so this was the big trade Jim Irsay was tweeting about. Davis was one of the potential candidates I mentioned when I wrote on the subject a few days ago, along with Denver’s Ryan Clady and Baltimore’s Cary Williams. The Colts are taking a big risk here. If Davis plays like he did last year, this is an obvious steal for them.

Last season, he allowed just 36 completions on 66 attempts (54.5%) for 496 yards (7.5 YPA), 3 touchdowns, and 4 interceptions, while deflecting 6 passes and committing 4 penalties. Only 24 and owed just over a combined two million in the next 2 seasons, the Colts could be getting a legitimate #1 cornerback who is young and cheap. At a position of major need, that’s definitely worth a 2nd round pick (and a 6th round pick, but that pick is pretty irrelevant in this trade). Davis will likely be the #1 cornerback in Indianapolis, moving Jerraud Powers off of opponents’ #1 receivers and filling a gapping hole in the starting lineup.

However, last year was Davis’ first elite season as the 2009 1st round pick allowed over 60% completion and more touchdowns than interceptions in each of his first 2 seasons in the league in 2010 to 2011. It’s definitely not uncommon for a player to have a breakout 3rd year and then continue their strong level of play, but Davis wasn’t impressing the Dolphins’ new coaching staff because he showed up out of shape to Training Camp and fell behind two cornerbacks on the depth chart.

Davis also has some injury history as he missed 4 games last season, but that’s not nearly as concerning as the potential work ethic problems. If the Colts are, in fact, getting a young, cheap, #1 cornerback for a 2nd round pick, it’s an obvious steal, but you have to wonder why a team would give away a young, cheap #1 cornerback for a 2nd round pick. Colts fans should know that Davis comes with a buyer beware tag. On top of that, the Colts are getting a guy roughly 2 weeks before the first game of the season. That’s not a lot of time for him to learn the playbook and the coverage scheme.

Grade: B

Trade for the Dolphins: It looked like Davis was going to open the season as the Dolphins’ #3 cornerback. Sean Smith has reportedly done the opposite of Davis this offseason, showing up to camp slimmed down 24 pounds to 6-3 190, making a strong impression, and looking poised to bounce back from a down season. In 2011 he allowed 61 completions on 104 attempts (58.7%) for 793 yards (7.6 YPA), 5 touchdowns, and 2 interceptions, while deflecting 5 passes and committing 2 penalties. In 2010, he allowed 24 completions on 45 attempts (53.3%) for 325 yards (7.2 YPA), 1 touchdown and 1 interception, while deflecting 8 passes and committing 1 penalty in 11 starts at cornerback (he made 4 at safety too, but wasn’t as good).

Richard Marshall, meanwhile, is looking continue his strong play from 2011. He allowed 28 completions on 54 attempts (51.9%) for 394 yards (7.3 YPA), 2 touchdowns, and 3 interceptions, while deflecting 5 passes and committing 6 penalties last season. He ranked 3rd in the league in receptions per coverage snap, 7th in yards per coverage snap, and 2nd in targets per coverage snap.

However, if they’re wrong about Davis and he bounces back as a young, cheap #1 cornerback in Indianapolis, they’re going to wish they had either kept him or gotten more for him. Starting cornerback probably won’t be an issue for the Dolphins this season, but after losing Davis, they’ll still be plagued with the same depth issues they had last season, the ones that Marshall was brought in to help with.

Nolan Carroll is now their #3 cornerback. He wasn’t very good last season as their #4 cornerback, allowing 16 completions on 30 attempts (53.3%) for 239 yards (8.0 YPA), 1 touchdown, and 1 interception, while deflecting 3 passes and committing 1 penalty. At first glance, they appear to have won this trade, but like the Colts, they’re also taking a risk and hoping that Davis won’t prove to be worth the risk for the Colts. However, I think they are the winner of this trade right now.

Grade: B

If you’re interested in doing a fantasy football league with me, here’s the link (no draft date set yet, currently standard, with the option to become PPR with group vote). http://msn.foxsports.com/fantasy/football/commissioner/Registration/Private.aspx?league=55086&password=FanSpot2

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Seahawks expected to name Russell Wilson starting quarterback

No official announcement has been made, but that’s just how Seahawks Head Coach Pete Carroll operates. However, after a strong performance in his 1st preseason start, Russell Wilson is expected to be the week 1 starter for the Seahawks at quarterback. Wilson impressed against opposing teams’ backups in the Seahawks’ first two preseason games, completing 22 of 33 for 279 yards, 3 touchdowns, and an interception, while rushing for another 82 yards and a score on 8 carries.

He showed enough to earn the start in the Seahawks 3rd preseason game, typically a game where you know who your starting quarterback is and let him play deep in the 3rd quarter. The general feeling around the situation was that Wilson would get the week 1 start if he played well in his first action against 1st teamers, playing against the Kansas City Chiefs.

Wilson did play well, completing 13 of 19 for 185 yards, 2 touchdowns, and no interceptions, while rushing for another 58 yards on just 2 carries. Wilson played 7 of the team’s 11 drives, certainly suggestive of a starting quarterback, leading the team at least 41 yards on each drive for a scoring opportunity (3 touchdowns, 3 field goals of 36, 39, and 45 yards, one missed field goal of 51 yards).

Matt Flynn, his primary competition for the job, did not play with what is being described as a sore elbow, with possible tendinitis, which doesn’t help his cause, even though the veteran had been seen as the favorite throughout the offseason over incumbent Tarvaris Jackson and 3rd round rookie Wilson, on the strength of the 3 year, 19.5 million dollar deal with 10 million guaranteed he signed earlier in the offseason. Jackson, meanwhile, played the other 4 series, completing 3 of 5 for just 1 yard. He’s expected to be traded to a team in need of a veteran backup any day now.

Wilson will be one of five rookie starting quarterbacks week 1 this season. 4 would have been a record for any week since the merger. Wilson is also one of a whopping 10 1st or 2nd year quarterbacks who will start week 1 for their team. However, with the exception of the Bengals’ Andy Dalton, all of the other quarterbacks were first round picks. Wilson is the only rookie non-1st round pick quarterback to be starting this season.

In fact, Wilson will become just the 5th non-1st round pick quarterback to get his team’s week 1 start since 1994.The results of the other 4 have not been pretty. Chris Weinke, a 4th round pick, got the week 1 start for the Panthers in 2001 because he was 29. Still, he completed just 54.3% of his passes for an average of 5.4 YPA and 11 touchdowns to 19 interceptions that season.

Quincy Carter, a 2nd round pick, got the week 1 start for the Cowboys that same season, completing just 51.1% of his passes for 6.1 YPA, and 5 touchdowns to 7 interceptions. Meanwhile, Kyle Orton, a 4th round pick, got the start for the Bears in 2005, completing just 51.6% of his passes for an average of 5.1 YPA, 9 touchdowns, and 13 interceptions. The only one who had a good rookie season was Andy Dalton last year, a 2nd round pick, as he completed 58.1% of his passes for an average of 6.6 YPA, 20 touchdowns, and 13 interceptions.

In fact, the history of non-1st round pick quarterbacks is not pretty at all in the NFL. Wilson will be one of just 9 non-1st round pick starting quarterbacks in the NFL this season (Andy Dalton, Drew Bress, Matt Schaub, Ryan Fitzpatrick, Tom Brady, Tony Romo, Matt Cassel and the winner of the John Skelton/Kevin Kolb battle are the other 8). That means 72% of the week 1 starting quarterbacks in the NFL this season will be former 1st round picks.

If you look at the upper echelon starting quarterbacks, like the ones who made the playoffs last season, that number is 67% as only Brees, Dalton, Brady, and TJ Yates were starting quarterbacks for playoff teams last year, 4 of 12 (I include Yates even though he was a backup for an injured Matt Schaub because Schaub was also a non-1st round pick). In 2010, that number held at 67%, as it was Matt Hasselbeck, Drew Brees, Matt Cassel, and Tom Brady bucking the trend.

NFL drafting is generally a crapshoot. However, the one thing NFL teams seem to be pretty foolproof at doing is not letting starting quarterbacks fall out of the 1st round of the draft. Obviously, not all 1st round pick quarterbacks work out, but it’s almost impossible to find a starting quarterback after the 1st round. If you possess the baseline tools to be a starting quarterback in the NFL, you’re going to go in the 1st round, even if your accuracy or footwork or mechanics needs a lot of work. Almost always, if a quarterback falls out of the 1st round, it’s because there’s something wrong with him, something preventing him from being a starting quarterback in the NFL.

For Wilson, the book on him is simple. He’s got a plus arm, great athleticism, and possesses all the intangibles in the world. He’s a natural born leader, who stepped onto Wisconsin’s campus after flirting with being a professional baseball player and was named the team’s captain just 3 weeks later. He completed 72.6% of his passes for 10.3 YPA and 33 touchdowns to 4 interceptions last year and led Wisconsin to an 11-3 record, a Rose Bowl appearance, and didn’t lose by more than a touchdown all season.

However, he’s not a natural pocket passer and shows poor footwork in the pocket. He has much better arm strength and instincts on the run. He’s great at improvising, but in the NFL, you have to make throws from the pocket and when he’s asked to drop back and pass on a traditional play, he shows diminished arm strength. He’s got happy feet and flees the pocket when he doesn’t need to. He’s also short and has trouble seeing over the line of scrimmage.

Those are the reasons why he fell and typically those are things that prevent quarterbacks from being starters in the NFL. There are exceptions, but most likely, Wilson will fall just like most quarterbacks who fall out of the 1st round, especially as a rookie. As well as he’s played this preseason, it’s important to remember that these are 3 preseason games, 2 of which were against guys who just fighting to make their rosters right now.

I’m baffled that the Seahawks wouldn’t at least try the veteran Matt Flynn first. Flynn is also a non-1st round pick and fell because of pedestrian arm strength, but Flynn is at least a veteran, who does have some success in the NFL in limited action as a career backup. If he had struggled, sure, go ahead and go with the rookie, who hopefully by then has better adjusted to life in the NFL, but starting Wilson week 1 based on these 3 games is almost definitely going to be a decision that comes back to bite them, especially when you consider that Wilson will be playing behind a poor offensive line and with a poor receiving corps. It’s also worth noting that Wilson got, by far, the minority of the 1st team snaps throughout the offseason and only made one pre-season start, which will hurt their offensive continuity and chemistry.

The Seahawks play in an easy division, have one of the league’s best home field advantages, and have a scoring defense that ranked 7th in the league, allowing 19.7 per game last season. However, they’ll probably struggle to move the ball through the air and their running game, as much hype as Marshawn Lynch gets, actually ranked just 21st in the league in rushing yards and 25th in the league in YPC last season.

While they’ll probably have a top-10 defense once again, they’ll also probably have a bottom-10 offense once again (23rd with 20.1 points per game last year) and that will almost definitely keep them out of the playoffs in a loaded NFC, unless we have any 2010 scenario where a team that wins 7 games wins the NFC West (unlikely). I’m a big fan of Pete Carroll as a coach, but I think the 7 games they’ve won in each of the last 2 seasons is a pretty reasonable expectation for this team again this year.

As for the fantasy implications for this move, Wilson has some intrigue as QB2 with upside because of his rushing ability. However, considering the history of non-1st round pick rookie quarterbacks and rookie quarterbacks in general, I don’t really like his upside. He probably won’t throw for a high YPA (even Dalton last year averaged just 6.6 YPA) and the Seahawks ran one of the most conservative offenses in the league last year, passing just 509 times.

With a rookie quarterback under center, they’ll only get more conservative, especially since with a mobile, run happy quarterback like Wilson. As a passer, I don’t like his chances to even exceed the 3091 yards, 14 touchdowns, and 13 interceptions that Tarvaris Jackson threw for last season. He might if he plays all 16 games, but Pete Carroll loves constant competition at positions and likely wouldn’t hesitate to pull Wilson for Flynn, now one of the league’s most expensive backups, if he struggles. That could end up being a crushing blow to the young quarterback’s confidence (even more reason why Flynn should have been allowed to start first), create a divisive locker room, and hurt their offensive continuity and chemistry. Teams that switch quarterbacks midseason for reasons other than injuries almost never make the playoffs.

If you’re interested in doing a fantasy football league with me, here’s the link (no draft date set yet, currently standard, with the option to become PPR with group vote). http://msn.foxsports.com/fantasy/football/commissioner/Registration/Private.aspx?league=55086&password=FanSpot2

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Additional suspension for Broncos’ DJ Williams?

The Broncos’ DJ Williams has been suspended for the first 6 games of the season for failing 2 drug tests and attempting to fabricate the results for a 3rd one. However, he faces the possibility of an additional suspension after being found guilty of driving while ability-impaired (lesser than a DUI) and driving without headlights. At the very earliest, Williams won’t be back until after the Broncos’ week 7 bye.

The Broncos should just cut Williams outright. He’s going to miss almost half the season anyway and has too much baggage. On top of that, he’s also simply not worth the non-guaranteed 5 million he’s owed this season. Once a solid linebacker, Williams, now going into his age 30 season, was ProFootballFocus’ 35th ranked 4-3 outside linebacker out of 42 last season. He most likely won’t see the non-guaranteed 6 million he’s owed in 2013, in the final year of a now ridiculous looking 6 year, 32 million dollar deal with 13 million guaranteed the Broncos signed him to way back in 2008.

If you’re interested in doing a fantasy football league with me, here’s the link (no draft date set yet, currently standard, with the option to become PPR with group vote). http://msn.foxsports.com/fantasy/football/commissioner/Registration/Private.aspx?league=55086&password=FanSpot2

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Redskins could cut Chris Cooley in near future?

Chris Cooley has been a Redskins fixture since they drafted the tight end in the 3rd round in 2004. Cooley has caught 428 passes for 4703 yards and 33 touchdowns in his career, all with the Redskins, and is the Redskins’ all-time leader in receptions by a tight end. However, Cooley missed 11 games with knee problems last year and was limited in several others, catching just 8 passes. Fred Davis has emerged as an above average tight end in his absence, catching 59 passes for 796 yards and 3 touchdowns in 12 games last season. Owed 3.85 million in salary and counting 6.23 million against the cap (3rd highest on the team), speculation that Cooley could be a final cut or cut even before then is pretty prominent.

The Redskins have been using Cooley a lot this Training Camp and preseason, in an effort to see how his surgically repaired knee holds up. They’ve used him in many creative ways, playing him as an h-back and a fullback in addition to a tight end. Given how entrenched Davis has become at tight end, that’s almost a necessity. Cooley is actually currently listed as the Redskins’ starting fullback. If Cooley agrees to a pay cut before the final cuts deadline, he might be able to stick on the roster, assuming the Redskins are comfortable with his knee. The Redskins do have a need for a fullback and Cooley, still only heading into his age 30 season, would be a valuable locker room guy as well.

If you’re interested in doing a fantasy football league with me, here’s the link (no draft date set yet, currently standard, with the option to become PPR with group vote). http://msn.foxsports.com/fantasy/football/commissioner/Registration/Private.aspx?league=55086&password=FanSpot2

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